Socio-economic development through the exploitation of natural resources in rural South Africa
-
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ee.08(4).2017.06
-
Article InfoVolume 8 2017, Issue #4, pp. 44-52
- Cited by
- 813 Views
-
373 Downloads
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
South Africa has many developmental challenges but three have been identified as affecting each other. The three challenges are unemployment, poverty and inequality. The Second Quarter Report by Statistics South Africa (STATSSA) confirms that poverty, unemployment and inequality are highest in rural areas and most especially among people with no or little education. Meanwhile, many people in rural South Africa have access to land which can be used to produce food for the ever increasing population in both the rural and urban areas, as well as for export and other value adding agribusinesses. The task of addressing the challenges of poor communities calls for a multi-stakeholder approach which can include the private sector, NGOs, communities, traditional leaders and the state coming together to pursue economic transformation in rural South Africa by tapping into the natural resources nature has provided for the communities. This article reports on how some stakeholders have come together to transform a rural community in South Africa. The paper uses qualitative data from personal and focus group interviews and observations as the main data collection instruments. The findings indicate that the stakeholders have been able to empower a community by tapping into and effectively using the natural resources in an area to transform it through collaborations and partnerships. The model is recommended to the government and development practitioners for adoption on how the natural resources that exist within communities can be exploited and effectively managed to transform rural economies to ensure inclusive growth and development.
- Keywords
-
JEL Classification (Paper profile tab)Q1, I25
-
References27
-
Tables0
-
Figures0
-
- African National Congress (2012). 53rd National Conference Resolutions. The 53rd National Conference held from 16-20 December 2012 in Mangaung.
- Carney, D. (1998). Sustainable livelihoods approaches: Progress and possibilities for change. Department for International Development (DFID).
- Coleman, A. (2017.) Agri transformation: the time for talking is over. Farmer’s weekly, 30-31.
- Confino. J. (2014). Uniliver’s Paul Polman: Challenging the corporate status quo. The Guardian.
- Dawood, G., Flanagan, J., & Pilusa, T. (2016). The National Land Reform Programme and Rural Development. Chapter 3 in FFC. 2016. 2017/2018 Submission for the Division of Revenue, Technical Report. FFC: Midrand.
- Henderson, R. (2017). BEE has failed, introduce voucher-based EED. Business Day.
- Hlomendlini, H. (2016). SA commercial farmers key to Africa’s food security. Farmer’s weekly, 6-7.
- Hruby, A. (2017). How to close Africa’s jobs gap. Lesotho Times, 12.
- IUCN (1980). World Conservation Strategy: Living Resource Conservation for Sustainable Development. IUCN-UNEP-WWF, Gland, Switzerland: pack of c. 50 unnumbered pp., illust., in stiff folder.
- KPMG (2016). Unlocking the power of partnership: A Framework for effective cross sector collaboration to advance the global goals for sustainable development.
- Lahiff, E. (2007). State, market or worst of both? Experimenting with market-based land reform in South Africa. Occasional Paper No 30, Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies, University of the Western Cape.
- Leedy, P. D., & Ormrod, J. E. (2005). Practical research. Planning and design. Eighth edn. International edition. New Jersey: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall.
- Maree, D. (2017). Creating a climate for African agricultural boom. Farmer’s weekly, 30-31.
- Merten, M. (2017). StatsSA Poverty Report 2017: Policies fail the people of South Africa. Daily Maverick. August 23, 2017.
- National Planning Commission (2011). National Development Plan 2030. Our future-make it work. The Department of the Presidency. Republic Of South Africa.
- Ngwenya, G. (2017). Put education first to transform the economy. City Press, 5.
- Nyirenda, J. E. (1996). The Relevance of Paulo Freire's Contributions to Education and Development in Present Day Africa. The African e-Journals Project.
- Phillips, L. (2017). Smarter land reform a key focus of Kwanalu strategy. Farmer’s weekly, 21.
- Polman, P. (2011). The importance of collaboration. The Guardian.
- Schwandt, T. A. (2007). The SAGE dictionary of qualitative inquiry. Los Angeles, CA: Sage.
- Scoones, I. (1998). Sustainable rural livelihoods: a framework for analysis (IDS working paper, 72). Brighton: IDS.
- Scoones, I. (2009). Livelihoods perspectives and rural development. Journal of peasant studies, 36(1), 171-196.
- Sekhoto, N. (2017). How young black farmers can make headway in the industry. Farmer’s weekly, 30-31.
- Statistics South Africa.(2017). Poverty on the rise in South Africa.
- Strauss, A. L., & Corbin, J. (1998). Basics of qualitative research techniques ans procedures for developing grounded theory (2nd. ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
- UNESCO. (2005). EFA Global Monitoring Report 2006. Literacy for Life. Paris: UNESCO Publishing.
- Wilson, J. (2010). Essentials of business research. A guide to doing your research project. London: Sage Publications Ltd.